The European Union (EU) is probing Elon Musk's X after its USD 33 billion acquisition by xAI, focusing on possible violations of the Digital Services Act related to corporate changes and deceptive platform design.
Billionaire Elon Musk. (File photo)
The European Union (EU) said on Thursday it was seeking more information from tech mogul Elon Musk's X about changes to its corporate structure, months after the social media platform was bought by xAI in a USD 33 billion deal.
"We are following closely changes in the corporate structure of X, as we would change in any other designated platform," a spokesperson for the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, was quoted as saying by news agency Reuters.
However, the spokesperson did not confirm an earlier report from Bloomberg News that said regulators were evaluating potential fines on X (formerly Twitter) under the Digital Services Act.
Before its summer recess in August, the regulator could announce a fine on X for alleged infractions under the DSA, though delays are possible, Bloomberg reported.
Any firm found in breach of the DSA faces a fine worth up to 6 per cent of its global turnover, and repeat offenders may be banned from operating in Europe altogether.
Earlier this month, X highlighted a disclaimer to its blue checkmark in an attempt to head off a possible hefty fine from EU antitrust regulators.
The Commission issued preliminary findings under the DSA in July last year that X violated rules on deceptive design, especially by turning the blue checkmark into a paid verification, assigning false credibility to users.
X had disagreed with the assessment. The EU had announced a probe into X's alleged breaches of the DSA in December 2023.
Published By:
Aashish Vashistha
Published On:
Jun 20, 2025
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